Properties of Stars How do we measure stellar luminosities?

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Presentation transcript:

Properties of Stars How do we measure stellar luminosities? How do we measure stellar temperatures? How do we measure stellar masses?

Brightness of a star depends on both distance and luminosity. Its color tells us its temperature (recall blackbody radiation).

Luminosity: Amount of power a star radiates (energy per second = watts) Apparent brightness: Amount of starlight that reaches Earth (energy per second per square meter)

Thought Question These two stars have about the same luminosity— which one appears brighter (i.e. has a larger apparent brightness) ? A. Alpha Centauri B. The Sun

Luminosity passing through each sphere is the same. Area of sphere: 4π (radius)2 Divide luminosity by area to get brightness.

The relationship between apparent brightness and luminosity depends on distance: We can determine a star’s luminosity if we can measure its distance and apparent brightness: Luminosity = 4π (distance)2  (Brightness)

Thought Question How would the apparent brightness of Alpha Centauri change if it were three times farther away? A. It would be only 1/3 as bright. B. It would be only 1/6 as bright. C. It would be only 1/9 as bright. D. It would be three times as bright.

The parallax angle depends on distance. Parallax Angle as a Function of Distance

Parallax Angle and Distance One degree has 60 ‘arcminutes’ and one arc minute has 60 arcseconds. So there are 3600 arcseconds in one degree.

Parallax and Distance The inverse of the parallax angle in arcseconds equals the distance to an object in parsecs. The nearest star is about 4 light years away, so p = 0.75 arcseconds. This is the largest parallax angle, all other stars have small p values. 11

Most luminous stars: 106LSun Least luminous stars: 10-4LSun (LSun is luminosity of the Sun)

Hottest stars: 50,000 K Coolest stars: 3000 K (Sun’s surface is 5800 K)

Remembering Spectral Types (Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest) Oh, Be A Fine Girl/Guy, Kiss Me Only Boys Accepting Feminism Get Kissed Meaningfully

Which of the stars below is hottest? Thought Question Which of the stars below is hottest? A. M star B. F star C. A star D. K star

Lines in a star’s spectrum correspond to a spectral type that reveals its temperature: (Hottest) O B A F G K M (Coolest)

Spectral Type Spectral types form a temperature classification system. It is based on the fact that different spectral lines occur at different temperatures. The problem is that you need very long exposure times to measure faint spectral lines. So can only do a few thousand stars this way. To classify millions of stars we use the stars color to estimate the blackbody temperature (i.e. to estimate the spectral type). The color of a star can be measured with only a very short exposure time.

To measure Stellar mass we use Binary Stars Orbit of a binary star system depends on the strength of gravity. So the orbits depend on the mass of the two stars.

Types of Binary Star Systems Visual binary Eclipsing binary Spectroscopic binary About half of all stars are in binary systems.

Visual Binary We can directly observe the orbital motions of these stars. We can only see visual binaries if they are very near Earth.

Eclipsing Binary We can measure periodic eclipses. Download an eclipsing binary animation from http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/TeachRes/Movies162/eclbin.gif We can measure periodic eclipses.

Spectroscopic Binary Download a spectroscopic binary animation from http://www-astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/teachRes/Movies162/spanim.gif R. Pogge, Ohio State University. We determine the orbit by measuring Doppler shifts.

We measure mass using gravity. Isaac Newton We measure mass using gravity. Direct mass measurements are possible only for stars in binary star systems. 4π2 G (M1 + M2) p2 = a3 p = period a = average separation This should look familiar … it is Newton’s general expression for Kepler’s 3rd Law.

Need two out of three observables to measure mass: Orbital period (p) Orbital separation (a or r = radius) Orbital velocity (v) For circular orbits, v = 2πr / p v r M

(MSun is the mass of the Sun.) Most massive stars: 100MSun Least massive stars: 0.08MSun (MSun is the mass of the Sun.) (some very rare stars may have > 100 MSun)

Now do the lecture tutorial section on Binary Stars. When you have finished do the tutorial section on Parallax and Distance.